Self‐Silencing to Sexism

Author/Creator ORCID

Date

2010

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Swim, J. K., Eyssell, K. M., Murdoch, E. Q. and Ferguson, M. J. (2010), Self-Silencing to Sexism. Journal of Social Issues, 66: 493–507.

Rights

Subjects

Abstract

Women's endorsement of beliefs that prioritize others’ voices over their own (i.e., self-silencing beliefs) predicted behaviorally self-silenced to everyday, interpersonal forms of sexism. Self-silencing beliefs, which are consistent with prescriptive gender roles for women, indicate that one should avoid conflict in relationships, put others needs over one's own, accept a discrepancy between one's personal and public self, and judge one's behaviors by external standards. Results from a diary study indicate that the more U.S. college women endorsed self-silencing beliefs the less likely they wanted to respond to sexist incidents and, if they wanted to respond to incidents, the more they verbally restrained their responses to everyday sexism and other stressful incidents. The results suggest that, when addressing women's tendency to self-silence to incidents, one should address women's gender-role consistent beliefs about how they should behave in interpersonal interactions.